Showing posts with label Marketville Mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marketville Mystery. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

"Past and Present" by Judy Penz Sheluk

EXCERPT
Past & Present
(A Marketville Mystery Book 2)
by Judy Penz Sheluk

Past & Present (A Marketville Mystery Book 2) by Judy Penz Sheluk

Past & Present is the second book in the Marketville Mystery series by Judy Penz Sheluk. Also available: Skeletons in the Attic (read my blog post).

Skeletons in the Attic by Judy Penz Sheluk

Past & Present is currently on tour with Great Escapes Virtual Book Tours. The tour stops here today for an excerpt. Please be sure to visit the other tour stops as well.


For another book by this author, please check out my blog post on A Hole in One.

Description
Sometimes the past reaches out to the present …
It’s been thirteen months since Calamity (Callie) Barnstable inherited a house in Marketville under the condition that she search for the person who murdered her mother thirty years earlier. She solves the mystery, but what next? Unemployment? Another nine-to-five job in Toronto?
Callie decides to set down roots in Marketville, take the skills and knowledge she acquired over the past year, and start her own business: Past & Present Investigations.
It’s not long before Callie and her new business partner, best friend Chantelle Marchand, get their first client: a woman who wants to find out everything she can about her grandmother, Anneliese Prei, and how she came to a “bad end” in 1956. It sounds like a perfect first assignment. Except for one thing: Anneliese’s past winds its way into Callie’s present, and not in a manner anyone - least of all Callie - could have predicted.

Excerpt from Chapter 5
“What brings you to Past & Present Investigations?”
Louisa took a sip of water. “May I rest the suitcase on the table?”
“Of course.”
“Thank you.” She popped open the brass locks. Inside the case were several plastic storage bags, the kind you used at the airport to store your liquids. “I didn’t even know my mom owned this. It belonged to my maternal grandmother, not that I ever met her. My mom was raised in foster care. She aged out at sixteen, shoved out of the system without any support. The experience soured her.”
“What about your father?”
“Not in the picture. My mom got pregnant at eighteen. I don’t know whether it was a one-night stand or she fell for the wrong guy. She never elaborated. I do know that whoever he was, he didn’t contribute a dime of support. I’ve certainly never met him. Nor do I care to.”
“Did your mom ever marry?”
“Never even dated anyone again, or if she did, she certainly never brought him home. We weren’t rich, but I didn’t want for anything.” Louisa grimaced. “Well, that may not be entirely accurate. I longed for affection. My mom had a hard time displaying any emotion. Every feeling she ever had was neatly compartmentalized. Not surprising considering her upbringing and my deadbeat dad. But she did her best. We did our best.”
I wondered if Louisa had ever been married, or if she’d followed in her mother’s footsteps.
“You’re probably wondering if I ever married,” she said, reading my mind. “The answer is, yes, three times. Husband number one when I was barely legal age to tie the knot. He turned out to be a gambler. He lost our toy poodle in a poker game, if you can imagine that. Husband number two was a drinker who couldn’t hold down a job when he went to the trouble of finding one. Husband number three was a serial cheater who didn’t even try to hide his infidelity. I left him two years ago and swore off men. I earn a decent living as a credit manager. It helps that I’m bilingual, especially if I’m traveling in Quebec.” She named a national automotive glass company. I knew they owned a couple hundred windshield replacement retail stores across Canada.
“What’s in the train case that makes you want to dig into the past?”
Louisa removed one of the plastic bags, pulled out a photograph and handed it to me. “This is my grandmother. Her name was Anneliese Prei.”
The resemblance to Louisa was uncanny. Despite the sepia tones of the old photo, it was obvious that her hair had the same honey-gold soft waves, and that her eyes were the color of milk chocolate. Even the mouth, full lipped and pouty, was identical. But it was the tilt of her nose, the slightly haughty way she held herself, which took her from look-alike to doppelgänger.
“She was beautiful. You look like her. You’re older, of course, and she has an edge about her that you don’t seem to possess, but overall, the resemblance is uncanny.”
“I always assumed that I took after my father. I certainly don’t look anything like my mom. When I saw this picture, it was as if my grandmother was calling out to me from the grave.”
[Want more? Click below to read a longer excerpt.]


Praise for the Book
Past and Present is a fascinating mystery with more intertwining appendages than an octopus trying to juggle!” ~ Cozy Up With Kathy
Past and Present is an electrifying cozy mystery weaving history, genealogy, and contemporary issues into an engrossing multilayered tapestry.” ~ Mallory Heart’s Cozies
“This was a fabulous quick read that I really couldn’t get enough of. I absolutely love mysteries that have a historical aspect to them.” ~ A Chick Who Reads
“Very interesting plot, well-crafted, with layered and engaging characters.” ~ Reading Is My SuperPower

About the Author
Judy Penz Sheluk
Judy Penz Sheluk is the author of two mystery series: The Glass Dolphin Mysteries (The Hanged Man’s Noose and A Hole in One) and The Marketville Mysteries (Skeletons in the Attic and Past & Present). Judy’s short crime fiction appears is several collections. She is a member of Sisters in Crime, International Thriller Writers, the Short Mystery Fiction Society, and Crime Writers of Canada, where she currently serves on the Board of Directors as the Regional Representative for Toronto/Southern Ontario. Find Judy on her website/blog, where she interviews other authors and blogs about the writing life.



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Thursday, December 1, 2016

"Skeletons in the Attic" by Judy Penz Sheluk

EXCERPT and GIVEAWAY
Skeletons in the Attic
(A Marketville Mystery Book 1)
by Judy Penz Sheluk


Skeletons in the Attic by Judy Penz Sheluk is ON SALE for only $0.99 (save $4) to 15 December. This book blast and giveaway is brought to you by Goddess Fish Promotions. Please be sure to visit the other participating blogs as well.


Description
What goes on behind closed doors doesn’t always stay there ...
Calamity (Callie) Barnstable isn’t surprised to learn she’s the sole beneficiary of her late father’s estate, though she is shocked to discover she has inherited a house in the town of Marketville - a house she didn’t know existed. However, there are conditions attached to Callie’s inheritance: she must move to Marketville, live in the house, and solve her mother’s murder.
Callie’s not keen on dredging up a thirty-year-old mystery, but if she doesn’t do it, there’s a scheming psychic named Misty Rivers who is more than happy to expose the Barnstable family secrets. Determined to thwart Misty and fulfill her father’s wishes, Callie accepts the challenge. But is she ready to face the skeletons hidden in the attic?


Excerpt
Leith let out a theatrical courtroom sigh, well practiced but over the top for his audience of one. “You haven’t really been listening, have you, Calamity?”
I was forced to admit I had not, although he now had my undivided attention. Marketville was a commuter community about an hour north of Toronto, the sort of town where families with two kids, a collie, and a cat moved to looking for a bigger house, a better school, and soccer fields. It didn’t sound much like me, or my father.
“You’re saying my father owned a house in Marketville? I don’t understand. Why didn’t he live there?”
Leith shrugged. “It seems he couldn’t bear to part with it, and he couldn’t stand living in it. He’s been renting it out since 1986.”
The year my mother had left. I’d been six. I tried to remember a house in Marketville. Nothing came to mind. Even my memories of my mother were vague.
“The house has gone through some hard times, what with tenants coming and going over the years,” Leith continued. “I’ve done my best to manage the property for a modest monthly maintenance fee, but not living nearby…” He colored slightly and I wondered just how modest that fee had been. I glanced back at the photo of his vibrant young family and suspected such treasures did not come cheap. There was probably alimony for the other trophy wives as well. I decided to let it go. My father had trusted him. That had to be enough.
[Want more? Click below to read a longer excerpt.]



Praise for the Book
"Skeletons in the Attic is a thought-provoking, haunting tale of decades-old deception. In this first-of-a-new series, Judy Penz Sheluk reveals herself to be a masterful storyteller, weaving a page-turner that hooked me from the start and kept me intrigued until the stunning finale." ~ Annette Dashofy, USA Today bestselling author of the Zoe Chambers mystery series
"Mystery readers will find Callie a compelling protagonist, the plot a fine, winding investigative piece that redefines the concept of 'dirty laundry' and whether or not it should be aired in public or secreted forever, and the story of how family connections, wealth, and truth can take on lives of their own a vivid production that translates to thoroughly engrossing reading right up to a completely unexpected, thought-provoking surprise conclusion." ~ Diane Donovan, Midwest Book Review
"With Skeletons in the Attic, Judy Penz Sheluk delivers a complex plot, an extremely likeable protagonist, and a bombshell ending you never saw coming. A delightful and heartwarming mystery!" ~ Diane Vallere, bestselling author of the Costume Shop Mysteries
"Sheluk has created a memorable and powerful character that lingers long after the final page, while giving Callie Barnstable a caustic wit, tenacity and a penchant for unraveling mysteries. By the last page, she’ll need all that and more. Relentless as it moves forward, Skeletons in the Attic takes the reader on a quest for a decades-old truth." ~ Jeff Buick, author of Bloodline
"Skeletons in the Attic is a beautifully crafted page-turner, whose heroine, Callie Barnstable, gives Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Milhone a run for her money. S is for Skeletons in the Attic!" ~ Ellen Byron, author of Plantation Shudders
"Skeletons in the Attic is a delight. Callie’s plight grabs the reader from the get-go and, as the plot twists and twists again, you follow her with heart in mouth. Is there any way for this to end well? Yes, there is, and you won't see it coming! I’m already looking forward to book 2." ~ Catriona McPherson, author of The Child Garden


About the Author
An Amazon International Bestselling Author, Judy Penz Sheluk’s debut mystery novel, The Hanged Man’s Noose, was published in July 2015. Skeletons in the Attic, the first book in her Marketville Mystery series, was published in August 2016.
Find Judy on her website/blog, where she interviews other authors and blogs about the writing life.


Giveaway
Enter the blast-wide giveaway for a chance to win a $10 Amazon or B$N gift card.

Freebies
Want a FREE bookmark or signed postcard? Find out how to get yours here.

 


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